Colorado Rockies spring training game no. 16 thread: Sean Sullivan vs. Landon Knack

SCOTTSDALE, AZ – FEBRUARY 20: Sean Sullivan #85 of the Colorado Rockies delivers a pitch against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Salt River Fields on Friday, February 20, 2026 in Scottsdale, Arizona. (Photo by Kyle Cooper)

After five straight spring training losses, including one in the Team USA exhibition, the Colorado Rockies got back in the win column against the Athletics, riding an 11-run explosion from the offense. Front and center in those fireworks was spring standout T.J. Rumfield, who notched three runs including a solo HR (his fourth of camp). Kyle Karros had a day as well (2-for-3, 1 HR, 2 RBI), and Brett Sullivan and Chad Stevens pitched in with early dingers. The offense will look to carry that momentum into a Saturday night showdown with the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Prospect Sean Sullivan (0-0, 2.45 ERA) will take the mound for the Rockies against LA, his first start of the spring. The southpaw has tallied six strikeouts and one earned run in 3.2 innings pitched across three appearances so far. The non-roster invitee will look to make the case for his big league potential after a year derailed by injuries. Brenton Doyle and Hunter Goodman make their returns to the lineup.

On the other side, Landon Knack (0-0, 16.20) will get his third start in what has been an up-and-down spring to this point. The “up” was impressive. Knack’s first start came against the Seattle Mariners, where he delivered a clean first inning. The “down” was ugly. The Los Angeles Angels rocked Knack for four hits (two of which were home runs), a walk, and three runs across seven batters faced, jacking up his ERA to 16.20. The Rockies could be poised to test his susceptibility to the long ball after their big day.

First Pitch: 6:05 p.m. MST

TV: MLB Network

Radio: Dodgers Radio AM570

Lineups:


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Messi lifts Inter Miami past D.C. United 2-1 before 72,026 in Baltimore

BALTIMORE (AP) — Lionel Messi scored in the 27th minute, and Inter Miami held on for a 2-1 victory over D.C. United on Saturday night in front of 72,026 at the home of the Baltimore Ravens.

With interest in Messi obviously high, the game was held in downtown Baltimore instead of at D.C. United’s smaller venue in Washington. Messi gave many fans what they came to see when he put Inter Miami (2-1-0) ahead 2-0 in the first half.

“It’s definitely nice to be able to go to away stadiums and know that you probably have more supporters than the actual home team,” Inter Miami goalie Dayne St. Clair said. “Obviously that won’t be the case in every single stadium. I think it was definitely a case tonight.”

Rodrigo De Paul also scored for Inter Miami. Tai Baribo pulled United (1-2-0) within one in the 75th minute, but D.C. was unable to score again on St. Clair, who played college soccer nearby at Maryland.

“I know a couple of my college coaches were here and a couple of my college teammates were here,” St. Clair said. “So definitely a full-circle moment to be able to go from playing at the University of Maryland to obviously such a big stadium here.”

It was an eventful week for Messi and his team, which visited the White House on Thursday as defending MLS Cup champion.

“I think it was a little bit different for me, because I wasn’t on the team last year,” said St. Clair, who played for Minnesota United before joining Inter Miami. “At the same time, not that many people get to be able to go and experience that.”

Inter Miami opened the scoring in the 17th minute when De Paul collected the ball about 15 yards from the goal and struck a shot into the far side of the net.

Messi then scored his third goal of the young MLS season, slipping behind the D.C. defense to receive Mateo Silvetti’s pass, then flicking the ball with one touch past goalie Sean Johnson.

Inter Miami has won two straight since dropping its league opener 3-0 to Los Angeles FC.

D.C. United broke through in the second half. Jackson Hopkins’ shot forced a one-handed save by St. Clair, and Baribo put away the rebound.

Up next

Inter Miami: At Nashville on Wednesday night in the CONCACAF Champions Cup.

D.C. United: At Chicago on Saturday night.

___

AP soccer: https://apnews.com/soccer

Mariners lose, snooze, then bruise White Sox in Spring Training, hurry home to catch WBC

HOUSTON, TEXAS – MARCH 07: Dominic Canzone #8 of the Italy celebrates after a home run in the seventh inning against Brazil during the 2026 World Baseball Classic Pool B game between Brazil and Italy at Daikin Park on March 07, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Kenneth Richmond/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Boring is good. 

The Mariners lost to the White Sox on Saturday. It doesn’t really matter how because it’s Spring Training. That I have nothing more pressing to tell you is a good thing. Spring Training is meant to be boring. It’s practice. And practice baseball follows the same conventions for all news: if it bleeds, it leads. Nothing bled today.

Logan Gilbert

Logan Gilbert pitched exactly as you’d expect. He loaded the bases in the second inning with a hit by pitch, a four-pitch walk, and a flare single. Then he got a strikeout on a pretty nasty splitter, followed by a pop out to escape the jam. He finished the day after four innings with two hits, two walks, two strikeouts, and his health. 

Gilbert in Spring Training continues to feel like an extension of 2025: nasty and unhittable and still somehow kind of frustrating. It’s like a precocious child making a double helix with their mashed potatoes—how the hell do you know what that is, please just eat. 

I’ve written (and read) about Gilbert’s efficiency a bunch over the last year and I’m not sure what’s left to say. If he can work through batters a skosh quicker, I think he’s a top three pitcher on the planet. If not, he’s merely top 20. Such is the burden of expectation. 

The Rest

The Mariners batters were bad in this game. Well, not the ones who matter. Brendan Donovan picked up a pair of hits, and Colt Emerson walked and looped a single. The rest of the lineup—mostly role players and organization depth—did nothing of note.  They got their only run in the bottom of the eighth inning. Will Wilson got hit by a pitch to leadoff, and Jarred Sundstrom doubled him home. 

The Mariners had no room to complain about the hit by pitch, as Randy Dobnak plunked three batters in the top half of the inning. Ryan Loutos had to come in to get out of it.  Then, in the inexplicable hijinks only possible in Spring Training, Dobnak returned to pitch the ninth. Somehow he got three outs on just seven pitches, though how much of that was him versus the batters trying to get out of the box ASAP, I’m not sure.

World Baseball Classic 

One reason I’m grateful for Boring Baseball is last night I watched Cal Raleigh step to the plate against an incredibly amped, increasingly exhausted (and obviously talented) 17-year-old pitcher throwing 95+ mph not always near the zone. Cal did not get hurt during the game, but I’ve since been primed to wince while Mariners are hitting, pitching, fielding or, in the case of Michael Arroyo this morning, running the bases. Thankfully, he appeared OK after this play: 

Also at the World Baseball Classic today, Dom Canzone obliterated a baseball. This is the exact pitch Dom has a very real claim to being the top player on the planet at hitting, as I wrote about at the beginning of the offseason

This wasn’t even Dom’s hardest hit ball of the day at 104 mph. He also had a single at 105 mph and a lineout at 114 mph.

The WBC continues on this evening. If you’d like to know which Mariners are playing when, an LLer made this great app with that exact information.

Wisconsin uses record-breaking 18 3-pointers to beat No. 15 Purdue 97-93 in regular-season finale

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) — John Blackwell made five 3-pointers and scored 25 points, Nick Boyd added 23 and Wisconsin set a school-record with 18 3-pointers in a road game Saturday in a 97-93 win over No. 15 Purdue.

The Badgers (22-9, 14-6 Big Ten) have won three straight overall and six of their last eight after going 18 for 34 from beyond the arc. That tied the second-highest single-game 3-point total in school history, and they also set a school record with 12 3s in the first half, despite playing without forward Nolan Winter, who has an injured left ankle.

Fletcher Loyer had 23 points and six 3-pointers, making his 282nd career 3 to break Carsen Edwards’ school record. Braden Smith had 20 points and nine assists, while Trey Kaufman-Renn added 17 points. Smith, Loyer and Kaufman-Renn all played their home finales.

It marked the first time in nearly 14,000 days and 135 games Purdue topped the 90-point mark and lost. The last time it happened was against Iowa State in Nov. 24, 1987.

Purdue started fast, using an early 13-0 run to take a 22-13 lead. But the Boilermakers couldn’t match the Badgers barrage of 3s that helped them take the lead and thwart every Purdue charge.

And after holding a 52-47 halftime lead and watching Purdue charge back in the second half by taking a 62-61 lead on Smith’s midrange jumper with 14:59 to play, the Badgers answered immediately with back-to-back 3s from Aleksas Bieliauskas to make it 69-62.

When the Boilermakers took a 73-72 lead with a 3 at the 10:04 mark, Wisconsin again answered again with a 3 — and never trailed the rest of the way.

Up next

Both teams will be waiting for the Big Ten Tournament pairings to come out Sunday to find out who and when they’ll play at Chicago next week.

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No. 9 Iowa beats No. 8 Michigan 59-42, advances to Big Ten title game vs UCLA

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Ava Heiden scored 16 points, Hannah Stuelke and Chazadi Wright each had 13, and No. 9 Iowa pulled away in the fourth quarter to beat No. 8 Michigan 59-42 on Saturday in the Big Ten Tournament semifinals.

The Hawkeyes outscored the Wolverines 24-6 in the fourth quarter. Stuelke, who also had 10 rebounds, scored seven points in the initial 2:23 of the final quarter to push Iowa ahead 42-38.

That was part of a pivotal 15-2 run. Wright and Taylor Stremlow hit 3s on back-to-back possessions, then Heiden converted a layup for a 50-38 lead. Stremlow had 11 points with three 3s.

The Hawkeyes (26-5) advance to Sunday’s championship game against the second-ranked and defending champion UCLA Bruins (30-1), who beat No. 11 Ohio State 72-62 in Saturday’s first semifinal.

Iowa got off to a 9-0 start and limited Michigan to a season-low output for a first quarter in taking a 13-4 lead after one. But the Wolverines rallied. Mila Holloway, who missed her first seven shots, gave Michigan its first lead at 34-33 on a three-point play with 6:08 remaining in the third quarter.

Holloway sank a pullup jumper with 37 seconds left to give Michigan a 36-35 lead entering the fourth quarter.

Holloway and Olivia Olson each had 10 points, but combined to make 8 of 26 shots, including 1 of 9 on 3-pointers.

Michigan (25-6) set a program record for regular-season and conference victories. But their last two losses were to the Hawkeyes, who won 62-44 on Feb. 22 in Iowa City.

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Harris scores 31 to lead Wake Forest to 80-73 comeback win over Cal

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) — Juke Harris tallied 31 points and grabbed 15 rebounds as Wake Forest came back from a double-digit deficit to defeat Cal 80-73 on Saturday to close out the Atlantic Coast Conference regular season.

Harris shot 10 of 22 from the field and made 9 of 13 free throws in the victory for the Demon Deacons (16-15, 7-11), and has scored in double figures in 30 straight games. Omaha Biliew and Mekhi Mason each chipped in with 10 points.

Wake Forest won the rebound battle, 45-29, and had 14 of its 23 buckets come with assists. They led for just 13:01.

The Deacs surrendered an 11-0 run in the first half that put Cal ahead 18-5, but chipped away to trail 37-29 heading into halftime.

Mason hit a 3-pointer that kicked off a 14-0 Wake Forest run midway through the second half that turned a one-point deficit into a 13-point advantage. Wake Forest’s lead shrunk to as little as one down the stretch, but the Deacs held on to secure the win.

Dai Dai Ames poured in 31 for the Golden Bears (21-10, 9-9) on 9-of-18 shooting, and was 10 for 10 from the charity stripe. Justin Pippen added 17 points before fouling out late, and Lee Dort led Cal on the glass with seven rebounds.

Up next

Cal: No. 9 seed and first-round bye in the ACC Tournament, faces 8th-seeded Florida State in the second round on Wednesday.

Wake Forest: No. 12 seed in the ACC Tournament, plays 12th-seeded Virginia Tech in the first round on Tuesday.

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Sam Aldegheri’s dazzling WBC performance shows growth of baseball in Italy

HOUSTON — Sam Aldegheri, still in his Team Italy uniform hours after he came out of the game, simply wasn’t ready to take it off Saturday afternoon.

He has pitched 95 games throughout his eight-year pro career — 79 games in the minors, seven in the major leagues for the Los Angeles Angels, and nine in the Italian League — but has never felt like this.

Aldegheri, the first player to be born and raised in Italy to reach the major leagues, put on one of the most dazzling pitching performances in World Baseball Classic pool history, suffocating Brazil’s lineup in an 8-0 victory.

He pitched 4⅔ shutout innings, only the second pitcher to pitch into the fifth inning in WBC pool play this year, striking out eight batters and allowing just one hit.

Sure, he has had better performances in his career, but never one more meaningful.

“It’s different,’’ Aldegheri said. “Play for your country is something that you can’t really explain, but you can feel it, feel all the support from back home. It’s amazing.’’

The nerves began when he awoke, knowing what this meant for his country, and he became emotional standing in the bullpen and listening to the Italian national anthem.

“I had goosebumps all over my body,’’ he said. “It was chilling. … I was just feeling deep inside, I was just trying to think about the game.

“Those moments are hard. You have all these feelings back home, everything goes by your mind. So it was really cool.’’

This is a 24-year-old who was born in Verona, Italy, and the only baseball he watched as a kid was YouTube videos of Dodgers three-time Cy Young winner Clayton Kershaw. There were a few baseball fields near his house, and with his older brother, Mattia, a right-handed pitcher, he grew up as a left-handed pitcher on the baseball diamond instead of the soccer field.

He was discovered as a 15-year-old in a tournament in Spain by a Kansas City Royals scout, and in 2019, the Philadelphia Phillies believed in him enough to pay him a $210,000 signing bonus. Aldegheri, the son of a father who works in a glass factory and a mother who works in a bakery, went off to America to chase his dreams.

He has pitched mostly in the minors for teams called the BlueClaws and Pandas and Bees and Threshers, and was traded in 2024 to the Angels for closer Carlos Estevez. He has pitched in seven major-league games for the Angels.

He still believes in himself, still wants to be an inspiration, and knows his Saturday performance could resonate throughout all of Italy.

“I think the game is growing,’’ he said. “Back home in Italy, I have been in a lot of camps during the offseason working with kids, and I have seen a lot of experienced coaches trying to help the game to grow. …

“They are starting to do these academies every region, every city. I have seen a lot of kids, they start from 6 to 8. Hopefully next couple years we will have better technology, too, more sponsors hopefully come in and just try to get better.’’

Says Italy catcher Kyle Teel of the Chicago White Sox: “Doing what he does on the mound and throwing like he can, it just goes to show how big baseball is in Italy, and how baseball is a big part of Italian culture.’’

It’s not just Aldegheri, but everyone from Team Italy is doing their part to let the world know they have arrived on the baseball scene, and are having a blast doing it.

Their 2½ hour flight from Phoenix to Houston was like a comedy club, with even the major league players saying they have never seen anything like it. They took the mic, sang Italian songs, and danced in the aisles. “I’ve never seen anything like what happened on that plane,’’ Teel said. “Just Andrea Bocelli bumping on the speaker. Everyone singing it at the top of their lungs. Nobody sitting in their seats. It was unbelievable. So much fun.’’

Said Italy outfielder Dante Nori of the Philadelphia Phillies, who hit two homers: “I’ve never been on a flight like that. That was something really special to me. We were laughing, dancing, just having a great old time on there.

“Our bond is unreal.’’

They’re the only team that has an espresso machine in the dugout and they forced Nori to chug some espresso after each of his first two home runs, which he promptly spit out on the dugout floor. They even have parmesan cheese and olive oil in the dugout just in case someone needs a snack.

“The coffee machine is because in Italy we drink coffee about 20 times a day,’’ Italy manager Francisco Cervelli says. “It’s a tradition. You’re walking down the road. You see a coffee spot, get some coffee, then you chitchat, and then keep walking and do the same thing all over and over again.

“That’s how Italy is.’’

Pardon Nori if it takes him a little longer to get accustomed to that espresso tradition.

“I do not like coffee,’’ Nori says, “so it did not taste great. The first one, especially, I was like, ‘Ugh,’ but the second one, I kind of liked that one a little bit more.’’

Who knows, can Italy one day not just be a team that fills out a WBC tournament pool, but become a legitimate power?

“I am not naive in the fact that I am Italian-American, and we are trying to represent Italy in the right way,’’ Italy first baseman Vinnie Pasquantino of the Kansas City Royals says. “What we are trying to do is open the door for more guys to play. For more guys like Sam, more Italian-born major leaguers, more guys that can make a competitive team in this Classic.

“I think that’s the long-term goal, as long as the Classic keeps continuing, for this team to be full of pure-bred Italians. The goal is to open that door and show, ‘Hey, Italy has got some ball players and all you have to do is invest in them a little bit, just invest some time equity into them.’ “

And, on Saturday afternoon, you had to look no further than Aldegheri for proof what could lay ahead for Italian baseball.

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Sam Aldegheri WBC performance shows growth of baseball in Italy

Rival Roundup, Vol. 80: This Week in Boiyoyoyoing!

SANTA MONICA, CA – MARCH 04: Actor David Straithairn arrives at the Film Independent’s 2006 Independent Spirit Awards at Santa Monica Beach March 4, 2006 in Santa Monica, California. (Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It seems like February grinds to a halt once pitchers and catchers report every year. While the excitement of spring training games provides a midwinter jolt, that buzz quickly wears off as you remember the RBIs don’t count, but the oblique injuries do. But now it’s March, the World Baseball Classic’s pool play is in full swing, and high schoolers are getting out of jams by breaking Aaron Judge’s bat. Baseball is back, baby, and as is the custom of this three-year cycle, we have meaningful baseball to tide us over these last ~three weeks until meaningful baseball begins all over again.

  • Starling Marte is still kicking around this ol’ league here, having just finished four mid-30s seasons with the New York Mets and finding a way to close in on a 40.0 bWAR career. He’ll have a shot to add more to that figure on a new deal with the Kansas City Royals that broke at the tail end of last week.
  • The Cleveland Guardians are bringing on Rhys Hoskins via that classic late-February minor-league deal avenue. Details indicate that Hoskins would receive an escalation to a $1.5MM salary should he advance to the major-league roster. Name a more classic duo than “details” and “providing information”.
  • Fans of both the Detroit Tigers and the Chicago White Sox may have mixed/bittersweet feelings about Jason Benetti’s hiring as the lead play-by-play man for NBC’s renewed coverage of Major League Baseball. Widely considered the favorite to land the position, the popular broadcaster will add another national gig to an already feathered national-gig-themed hat. He continues to serve in an increasingly-popular dual role a la Joe Davis or even Matt Vasgersian, holding down a local gig while moonlighting as a voice with a little more reach.
  • Kevin McGonigle is coming, so you better get used to him now.
  • Finally, Eric Hosmer will be joining the Kansas City TV booth this season, the latest in a long line of post-career coaches or broadcasters proving that even if you are only in your 20’s, if you’ve been watching baseball for long enough, somebody is out there who can make you feel old. There’s a part of me that still hasn’t processed that ours is the same Justin Morneau.

Western Illinois turns back Lindenwood’s rally, wins women’s OVC Tournament championship

EVANSVILLE, Ind. (AP) — Mia Nicastro had 21 points and 10 rebounds, Mallory Shetley added 18 points and Western Illinois defeated Lindenwood 71-65 on Saturday to win the OVC Tournament championship.

The Leathernecks advance to the NCAA Tournament for the third time. Their prior appearances were in 1995 and 2017.

No 1 seed Western Illinois led 54-50 through three quarters. Lindenwood, the No. 2 seed which once trailed by 16 points, got a three-point play from Gracie Kelsey and later Aleshia Jones had a three-point play followed by a layup that got the Lions within 59-58 with 5 1/2 minutes remaining in the game.

Nicastro and Shetley then led Western Illinois down the stretch, scoring eight points and four points, respectively, as the Leathernecks closed out the championship. Lindenwood was held to one point over the final 5 1/2 minutes until Ellie Brueggemann hit two desperate 3-pointers in the final 25 seconds.

Brueggemann scored 21 points, Jones 18 and Kelsey 14 for Lindenwood (25-8).

Madison Davis and Allie Meadows each scored 10 points for Western Illinois (26-5).

Western Illinois, which never trailed, raced out to a 13-3 lead after five-plus minutes of play. The Leathernecks led 20-11 heading to the second quarter and 36-22 at halftime after shooting 63% in the first half.

The Lions, who defeated Western Illinois 50-49 in a regular-season finale to create a tie for the regular-season championship, battled back in the third quarter. Lindenwood outscored Western Illinois 28-18 without a scoring run of more than five consecutive points.

Lindenwood lost in the championship game for the second year in a row.

Up next

Postseason decisions await on Selection Sunday. ___

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Jahari Long scores 21 points as George Mason pounds No. 25 Saint Louis, 86-57

FAIRFAX, Va, (AP) — Jahari Long had 21 points and nine assists, and George Mason routed No. 25 Saint Louis 86-57 in the regular-season finale for both teams Saturday.

Kory Mincy added 15 points, five rebounds and five assists for the Patriots (23-8, 11-7 Atlantic 10), who defeated a ranked opponent for the first time since upending then-No. 16 Dayton on Feb. 21, 2024.

Dion Brown had 13 points for the Billikens (27-4, 15-3), who had already clinched the No. 1 seed in next week’s Atlantic 10 tournament. They shared the regular-season title with VCU, a team they defeated twice this season.

Senior center Robbie Avila, who entered averaging a team-high 13.0 points for Saint Louis, played only five scoreless minutes in the first half because of foul trouble. He finished with two points and one rebound in 12 minutes.

With Avila sitting for the final 12:05 of the first half, George Mason opened a 43-34 halftime lead. The Billikens could never get closer against the Patriots, who shot 57.6 percent for the game and 73.1 percent in the second half.

After Avila finally scored to make it 49-39, George Mason rattled off the next 17 points as Saint Louis went scoreless for 6:54. George Mason eventually built a 34-point lead. Besides a 25-point deficit in a Feb. 24 loss at Dayton, the Billikens had not trailed anyone by more than 15 all season.

Nick Ellington (13 points, 10 rebounds) and Emmanuel Kanga (13 points, 11 rebounds) both had double-doubles for George Mason, which outrebounded Saint Louis 41-26.

Up next

Saint Louis will play Fordham or George Washington in the Atlantic 10 quarterfinals in Pittsburgh on Friday.

George Mason will face La Salle or St. Bonaventure in Thursday’s Atlantic 10 second round.

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